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Sunday, 24 February 2013

Shirley
Hazzard is one of those writers who can skirt the borders of literary
pretension and get away with it due to her beautiful writing style and her
subtle skill with narrative form. Hazzard also has a splendid way of making an
obtuse plot inviting, making The Transit of Venus a master class of
highly literate writing that even those who feel most comfortable with so
called genre novels can easily read and enjoy.

Hazzard
is an Australian ex-pat who left the country in 1947 at the age of sixteen and
as far as I can ascertain has never returned. She began the life of a writer in
the early 1960’s when she submitted a short story that she’d written for her
own enjoyment to The New Yorker and it was published. Since then there has been
short story collections, non-fiction and four novels. Although Hazzard is not
prolific, there was a gap of twenty-three years between Transit and The
Great Fire
(2003); she makes up for it with her sheer class.

The
Transit of Venus is, on the surface, a story about two orphaned Australian sisters,
Caroline and Grace Bell, who end up living in 1950’s England. The narrative
takes place over four decades and follows their lives and, most significantly,
their relationships. Love, with all its triumphs and tragedies, is central to
the novel. Caroline has many suitors but it is her unrequited relationship with
the long-suffering Astronomer Edmund Tice that gives the novel romantic
tension. Using the actual transit of Venus as an analogy for the vagaries of
romance, Hazzard milks it for all it’s worth. She suggests that like trying to
observe the transit of Venus, you need to be in the right place at the right
time to succeed romantically.

Thematically
The Transit of Venus tackles not just the nature of love, but also gender
politics, class, wartime morality and personal duplicity. One of the strengths
of the novel is Hazzard’s skill in bringing the time period of the 1950’s to
the 1980’s alive. The narrative is a superb blend of the personal and the
historical, each complimenting the other. There’s a great sequence in which she
describes a multitude of women across 1950’s London waking up and preparing
them-selves for a day’s work. These women represent the vanguard of working
women who weren’t going to waste the gender gains of WWII.

Hazzard’s
pose is dazzling, sophisticated and beautiful, allowing a special kind of
engagement between the reader and the narrative to develop. At times I felt
enraptured by her writing and as the novel unfolded the strength and subtlety
of the plot became readily apparent. Hazzard also drops a few strong hints
about how the novel ends early on and if you pay attention you will understand
the ending, otherwise you may be in for a re-read.

Hazzard’s
characters have a certain cold complexity, particularly Caroline, who maneuvers
through her relationships with a subtle cold detachment. Caroline’s sister,
Grace, mostly serves to underline the gender trap of domesticity, although she
does take the lead in a section filled with frustrated romantic yearnings. Her
husband, Christian Thrale, represents middle-class public servant
small-mindedness, something Hazzard herself was familiar with having worked for
the United Nations.

I
first read this novel way back in 1994 for a university unit on Australian
literature and it really opened my eyes to the possibilities of highly literate
fiction. My prior reading habits mainly included cult novels and science
fiction. Hazzard, with one novel, inspired me to move outside my comfort zone
and for that I’m grateful. Recently I read an interview
with Hazzard in the Guardian from 2006 and I realized that my conversion was no
coincidence. She has this to say about literature:

"The idea that somebody has expressed something, in a
supreme way, that it can be expressed; this is, I think, an enormous feature of
literature. I feel that people are more unhappy, in an unrealised way, for not
having these things in their lives: not being able to express something, or to
profit from somebody else having expressed it. It can be anything but it's
always, if it's supreme, an exaltation."

To
me this perfectly sums up just why fiction is just as important, if not more
so, than non-fiction when it comes to guiding us through this weird universe we
find ourselves in. Read The Transit of Venus and you’ll find out just why.

Sunday, 10 February 2013

No
Certainty Attached is written by long time fan musician and writer Robert
Dean Lurie, who in 1990 at the tender age of 16 saw The Church live on a tour
of the U.S. Thirteen years later Lurie contacted Kilbey to ask if he’d be
involved with this biography and to Lurie’s surprise he said yes. Fittingly the
biography begins with some words from Steve Kilbey himself:

Lurie
attempts to come to some kinda understanding of my paradox. That is, I can be
so nice, or I can be not so nice and hardly anything in the middle. And it’s
funny that Lurie puts the boot in at the end and he reckons that the fambly
manne (sic) thing is an act, and my everyman pose is faux, and really I’m the
same old prick, and Rob, you’ve hit the nail on the head, actually…

As
a long time fan of both The Church and Kilbey’s solo music, the question of
whether Steve Kilbey is the same old prick is something I do not particularly care
about (as interesting as that is). For me the music is the main consideration
and I consider The Church to be one of greatest Australian bands of any era.
What the above quote reveals is that No Certainty Attached is not one of those
sycophantic and superficial biographies. The fact that Kilbey’s ego is not
pandered to and that Lurie himself is part of the story makes No Certainty
Attached
one of the most enjoyable music biographies I’ve read for a long time.

It’s
easy to warm to Lurie, his writing style is unpretentiously affable and over the
course of the book his relationship with Kilbey and The Church progresses to
the level of friendship. Lurie’s life is very much tied up with Kilbey in terms
of being a source of inspiration and ongoing fascination. Lurie recounts his
first meeting with Kilbey in 1998 as a support for a solo gig, a meeting that
provided him both disillusionment and a certain level of fulfillment. The book
contains several interludes in which Lurie ponders the ambiguous boundaries
between fandom and his burgeoning relationship with Kilbey. Bravely Lurie
recounts how during one of their interviews for the book Kilbey openly tests
him for evidence of sycophancy; a test that Lurie fails, much to Kilbey’s
displeasure. But Lurie later admits that it taught him a valuable lesson.

Although
Lurie’s presence in the book is welcome, it’s Kilbey’s story and the history of
the band that makes the book an essential read for Kilbey/Church fans. There’s
the usual childhood background, with Kilbey emigrating with his parents from
the UK in 1957, eventually settling in Canberra. Steve Kilbey the child was a
Doctor Who fan and as Lurie notes was, for better or worse, a smaller version
of his adult self. Kilbey became a reluctant teenager, recalling that he was
disappointed when he realized that his childhood had ended. Lurie notes that as
a teenager Kilbey dated a girl that he was attracted to because she looked like
Roger Waters circa the 1971 Meddle album. Hilariously he couldn’t
understand why this didn’t go down well. Recollections like these give the
biography a welcome level of charm and warmth.

Steve Kilbey's girlfriend in high school

The
tale of how The Church came together as a band is a fascinating one. Lurie does
a fine job recounting the history of The Church, but one of the best things
about the book was that I found out about Kilbey’s many obscure side projects
that ran parallel with both the Church and his solo career. It’s possible I
could be spending a lot of money online searching out these records. Kilbey’s
career is like a labyrinth with many rooms containing obscure treasures.

No
Certainty Attached also contains a few revelations; including that
incredulously the first lineup of the band included a guy who bullied Kilbey in
high school – Nick Ward. Lurie’s interviews with Ward reveal that twenty or so
years later he probably would still be bullying Kilbey had he stayed in the
band. What is it about drummers? I was also amazed to learn that Kilbey
endured a ten-year heroin
addiction, which began post Gold Afternoon Fix (1990) - naughty Steve, but I’m
glad he survived to tell the tale.

Lurie’s
serpentine tale of strife, inspiration, failure and musical brilliance ends in
2006, where again he meets with Kilbey on tour. The meeting is friendly and you
can detect that fambly man vibe between them. At the end of the book Kilbey has
the final word in a hilarious stream of consciousness via his blog in which he
refers to Lurie as having been “…some seriously uptight fanboy” and how he
divested himself of that and wrote “a good book”. Kilbey is correct and Lurie
should update it soon as The Church released one of their best albums in 2009 (Untitled
#23)
and are still touring to this day. I advise Church fans to read this book, but
no doubt many have already. Also check out Kilbey's interesting blog...

Synopsis

This blog is a project designed to help improve my writing skills and to provide a record of what I have read over the years. Hopefully it will also be a resource for those curious about literature. I mostly read literary fiction, cult books, non fiction and science fiction. I also run book clubs at Subiaco Public Library, where I’ve worked happily amongst the books for the last 10 years; so some of the books I review have been selected by my book club members, which helps introduce me to authors I might normally ignore. I have also completed a B.A. in literature at U.W.A. Also you’ll find no links to online bookstores on this blog. I love bookstores and I encourage everyone to support them.